Chicago News

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    Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot spoke about school reopening at a virtual townhall organized by seven newsrooms on Sept. 29, 2020. YouTube

    Among the factors Chicago Public Schools is weighing when deciding whether to reopen school buildings: the experience of the Archdiocese of Chicago’s 150-plus campuses, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Tuesday.


    The mayor, who oversees public schools in Chicago and appoints the schools chief and board, is expected to make the final call about reopening campuses along with city health officials. Chicago started the school year virtually three weeks ago after initially planning to begin the year with a hybrid schedule.


    Meanwhile, the Archdiocese of Chicago, which is the state’s largest private school operator with 70,000 students last spring, reopened its campuses in late August. Schools are offering full-day instruction — some larger campuses have hybrid schedules where students go a few days a week — and families have the option of choosing all-virtual instruction.


    “We haven’t made a decision yet on whether (reopening) is going to be possible,” Lightfoot said. “We’re following very closely the experience of Archdiocese schools, many of which have been in-person learning five days a week or in a hybrid model that includes in-person learning. There’s a lot we can learn from their experience. They are in many of the same neighborhoods where CPS schools are.”


    The mayor, who stressed a decision about schools was coming “relatively soon,” spoke Tuesday night at a Lens on Lightfoot virtual town hall organized by the Triibe and six other independent newsrooms, including Chalkbeat Chicago.


    In one week this month, the Archdiocese reported 16 positive COVID-19 cases among its students and staff, which is considerably less than 1% of its system, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. The archdiocese declined requests to provide a full accounting for cases since the start of school, the paper said.


    At least one campus, St. Rita of Cascia High School on the city’s Southwest Side, temporarily shifted to virtual learning after two students tested positive in late August. The campus has since reopened.


    Students are divided into cohorts and stay in those same small groups each day. The reopening plan also requires students and educators to wear masks and undergo temperature checks each morning before entering buildings.


    The Archdiocese also published an infection protocol guide that details what happens if students or educators test positive. The plan includes contact tracing.


    “There are things we can learn from them. They seem to have done a really good job keeping their school community safe,” Lightfoot said.


    As virtual learning progresses, Chicago parents have begun pressuring the mayor and school district to make a decision about whether students will return to campuses in November, at the start of the second quarter. The school district has floated a plan to bring some special education students back earlier.


    The mayor also said the city had made progress in closing the digital divide that has complicated the shift to virtual learning. This summer, Chicago announced a plan to provide free internet for up to four years for 60,000 households representing 100,000 students. As of Tuesday, the city had signed up 38,000 students, slightly more than a third of the goal, Lightfoot said.


    She acknowledged the challenges of reaching some families, citing some households’ outstanding debt as one obstacle slowing sign-ups. “We’re working through those issues,” she said. “We’ve made significant progress in a short amount of time.”


    “Part of the difficulty is that, even though it is free, it’s about making sure families feel safe signing up,” she added. “We’re really leaning into building up principals where we are seeing low connectivity among students, making sure parents know this option is available, and providing the technical assistance they may need so they can get registered and we can get them connected.”

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    A plan to rebuild both Division Street bridges and make other streetscape improvements around Goose Island is poised to take a leap forward Tuesday with the approval of a measure allowing the city to seize a cluster of Near Northwest Side properties.
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    Staffers at 1540 Bar & Grill in Bucktown watch as Mayor Lori Lightfoot announces new coronavirus guidelines that will allow bars without food licenses to reopen for indoor service starting Oct. 1 [HANNAH ALANI/BLOCK CLUB CHICAGO]

    City leaders said the city is making enough progress to contain the spread of coronavirus to allow for looser restrictions on dining out and in-person activities beginning Thursday.

    CHICAGO — Mayor Lori Lightfoot is easing coronavirus restrictions on bars, restaurants, salons and fitness centers, saying the city has made sufficient progress in fighting the pandemic.

    Bars can reopen for indoor service starting Thursday, the mayor announced Monday. Restaurants can allow up to 40 percent capacity, up from 25 percent. Both can serve customers until 1 a.m.

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    Dust runoff from Hilco Redevelopment Group’s April 11 demolition of a smokestack near Little Village. [YouTube/Alejandro Reyes]
    The city would have an official framework to revoke property tax incentives it’s awarded to so-called “bad actors” and developers whose projects have negative impacts on the health and safety of residents under a proposed ordinance (O2020-3395) from Ald. Michael Rodriguez (22).

    The ordinance is set to be considered at 2 p.m. Tuesday by the City Council’s Committee on Economic, Capital and Technology Development, three months after the council approved a non-binding resolution (R2020-353) as an opening salvo in the effort to establish a process to rescind tax incentives from irresponsible developers.
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    Taxpayers’ Federation of Illinois president Carol Portman and Chicago Chief Financial Officer Jennie Huang Bennett during a City Council Finance Committee hearing on Friday


    Chicago Chief Financial Officer Jennie Huang Bennett and a panel of policy researchers floated a plan to collect money from large non-profits but warned against relying on new borrowing to fill the city’s $1.2 billion budget gap for next year.
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    News in brief: Top city lawyer doubles down after aldermen push back on warning over minority hiring; proposal to remove police from schools gets a legislative boost

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    A proposed series of tweaks to Cook County’s ethics ordinance backed by county board President Toni Preckwinkle would add rules to crack down on nepotism, improper gift-giving and sexual harassment but would not place limits on outside employment the way the county’s Board of Ethics proposed earlier this year.
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    News in brief: Aldermen to reexamine revenue plans, Board of Ethics members confirmed to new terms
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  • The Affordable Requirements Ordinance is one of the city’s most important tools for chipping away at endemic racial segregation, Department of Housing Comm. Marisa Novara said during a hearing on Wednesday.


    Developers had a message on Wednesday for aldermen and city housing officials who want more deeply affordable and accessible housing units to be included in high-end new developments: don’t expect us to pay for all that by ourselves.
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  • The Cook County Board of Commissioners is set to renew Board President Toni Preckwinkle’s emergency COVID-19 budgeting and procurement powers through December, accept a proposed $3.4 billion 2021 budget plan for the Cook County Health system and lay the groundwork for choosing a successor to Independent Inspector General Patrick Blanchard during its regular board meeting on Thursday.
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  • News in brief: Top city lawyer puts aldermen on notice; Watchdogs lay out roadmap to court clerk’s office reform
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  • City Council Committee on Environmental Protection and Energy chair Ald. George Cardenas (12) and Department of Assets, Information and Services Comm. David Reynolds during a committee meeting on Tuesday


    ComEd must implement ethics reforms, end late fees and non-payment disconnections and commit to drastic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by 2035 as preconditions for the city to sign a new franchise agreement with the utility giant, according to a letter Mayor Lori Lightfoot sent to leaders of the company on Monday.
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  • A long-promised amendment to the city’s Affordable Requirements Ordinance is on track to come before the City Council later this fall.


    Aldermen on Wednesday will offer ideas on how to rewrite the city’s Affordable Requirements Ordinance, a months-in-the-making project to stamp Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s imprint on a controversial and evolving housing policy.
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  • Chicago Department of Family and Support Services Commissioner Lisa Morrison-Butler speaks during a committee meeting on Monday.


    The city’s overwhelmed network of homeless shelters is ill-prepared to handle the long-term fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic and its resulting economic devastation, a top city official warned aldermen on Monday.
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  • A report commissioned by the city found last month that it would be “financially infeasible” for the city to take control of its electric utility system.


    Aldermen will get the chance on Tuesday to ask city officials and researchers for more details about a recent report that threw cast doubts on the idea of wresting control of the city’s electric utility away from Commonwealth Edison.
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